I had never heard of this album until very recently
when I stumbled upon it by chance. To be honest, I had never heard of
Runo Ericksson's name either until then. At least not knowingly. I
have, however, heard his trombone before – he appears on numerous
recordings by artists mostly in the jazz field, including national
treasures Jan Johansson, Monica Zetterlund and Mikael Ramel's dad
Povel Ramel. And strangely yet – he's present on one of my all-time
favourite jazz albums, George Russell's dazzling live album ”The
Essence Of George Russell”! But somehow, his name never registered in my
memory.
In my defence, Runo Ericksson played a successful
hide-and-seek spending lots of time abroad, from the end of the 60's
mostly in Switzerland. Prior to that, he studied under Romanian
conductor Sergiu Celibidache and French composer, conductor and Polar
Music Prize winner Pierre Boulez.
Being something of the
eternal sideman, ”Omnibus” was his first – and as far as I
know, his only – album as a leader. Recorded in Switzerland with
Swiss, Austrian and American musicians, it was released on Swedish
label Four Leaf Clover in 1980. And what an album it is!
Taking cues from both spiritual jazz, free jazz
and Eastern traditions, it's an elevated work of art, dripping with
mysticism without ever getting cheesy (like a lot of spiritual jazz
does). It's musically sparse but emotionally dense, and although it
often turns its attention inwards, it's never insular or arrogant.
”Omnibus” has a wide-open heart and welcoming arms; an intense
care for the listener. It's also no stranger to surprises, as in
”Fiddeling” when a Swedish folk tune suddenly bursts through but
vividly coloured with bright Indian pigments. The pieces move
lightly, sometimes so lightly they seem to levitate and lit
the air with the beautiful colours of the music. I'm not a fan of
jazz guitar, but here, Harry Pepl's guitar smoothly adjusts to the
essence of the sometimes eerie groove of the collective. This is a masterpiece of an album, unique and strangely detached from
time, sometimes bordering on psychedelic in spirit but always moving in its own mysterious ways, never failing to stun,
captivate, and amaze.
Saturday, June 18, 2022
RUNO ERICKSSON'S OMNIBUS – Runo Erickson's Omnibus (Four Leaf Clover, 1980)
ASTON REYMERS RIVALER – Complete albums 1979-1981
Aston Reymers Rivaler were originally a
street band, and a continuation of obscure rock outfit Rockslusk who
subsequently had two tracks on a Sista Bussen tape compilation
entitled ”Mediokra hjärnor” in 1982. Aston Reymers Rivaler
released several albums in the 80's, but only the first three fit in
with this blog's timeframe.
Swedish lyrics, instrumental
International relevance: *
Second album ”Kräål”
(= the word ”creole” with a made-up Swedish spelling) was a bit
more polished than its predecessor, but similar in style. The
track ”Stockholms ström” was never released as a single, but it
quickly became a massive radio success nonetheless. A Swedish cover
of Millie's early ska hit ”My Boy Lollipop” entitled ”(Min
tjej) Sockertopp” is this album's cringe peak, while their first
full-on foray into reggae ”(Vi bygger om) Hela Stockholm” is
surprisingly credible with its mild use of dub effects. Fittingly
enough, it features Peps on backing vocals, clavinet and tambourine.
Thinking of it, it wouldn't have been out of place on Peps' own album
”Spår”.
A non-album single from around this time brought
the band another hit, as the anti-nuclear power calypso ”Godis är
gott” was released with the March 1980 nuclear power referendum in
mind. ”Godis är gott” and ”Stockholms ström” are probably Aston
Reymers Rivaler's still best known tracks.
For their third album ”Tvål”, the band switched
labels from the independent Musiklaget to major label Metronome which
may partly explain why it suffers from a duller sound. Also, their
patented gumbo of styles began wearing thin at this point. You may
not like the first two albums, but they were nevertheless bubbling
with joy whereas ”Tvål” sounds predictable and lacklustre. Album
opener ”Jakten på amazonkvinnornas guld” is a decent stab at New
Orleans rhythm & blues (with some nice harmonica work to boot),
but again, the best track is another brooding extended reggae number
called ”Det går”.
Från myggjagare till foträta full album playlist
Kräål full album playlist
Tvål full album playlist
Friday, June 17, 2022
VARIOUS ARTISTS – Rockplock (Talking Music, 1980)
Featured artists: Dynamis / Vackert Väder / The Information / Kyrkstöt / Rubbet
Swedish vocals
International relevance: *
Compilation of five Christian bands contributing two tracks each, on the Talking Music label. The five bands featured are Dynamis, Vackert Väder, The Information, Kyrkstöt and Rubbet. While no band is fullblown progg but more in a pedestrian AOR and hard rock vein and of little interest, there are proggish undercurrents in Vackert Väder's and Rubbet's contributions. Kyrkstöt's ”Hårda krav” is a boneheaded boogie number, but the lyrics take a welcome dig at the fashionable politics of the day even if it's from a severely Xian perspective.
Kyrkstöt released a 45 also in 1980,
while the other bands all had at least one album under their own
name.
FOLKVIND – Folkvind (Oktober, 1977)
International relevance: **
Trio Folkvind's sole LP is a straight-ahead folk album with mostly traditional tunes, some augmented with new lyrics. It's quite likely the only trad folk album to mention heroin and Ritalin in its lyrics.
Despite being released on the Oktober imprint (and featuring a Fria Proteatern member, Marie-Louise Söderström), it's a pretty good album. It's well played with mainly fiddle, keyed fiddle and zither providing the musical backdrop to Eva Tjörnebo's voice that fits in nicely with style. Some tracks are pretty evocative, such as ”Jag vill gå vall” and ”Visa från Önnarp” – the latter almost sounds like something out of the ”Wicker Man” movie.
It will hardly appeal to the casual
progg fan, and unless you have a special interest in traditional
Swedish folk music, it will surely be dismissible, but it's a solid if unremarkable genre piece with the
occassional peak moment.
No links found
Thursday, June 16, 2022
HEAVY LOAD – Full Speed At High Level (Heavy Sound, 1978)
International relevance: *
Formed in 1976 as a trio by brothers Ragne and Styrbjörn Wahlquist, it wasn't until the early 80's that Stockholm band Heavy Load had their real breakthrough – as a quartet – championed by Sweden's then only high profile heavy metal journalist Anders Tengner. Albums ”Death Or Glory” and ”Stronger Than Dirt” – along with busy gigging – made them into Sweden's first prominent contribution to the ever growing heavy metal scene. With their old Norse aesthetics, they were also pioneers of what was to become known as the nebulous Viking metal style, predating even Bathory with a couple of years.
However, when ”Death Or Glory” was released in 1982, they already had one album out. Released as early as in 1978, ”Full Speed At High Level” was self-financed with support from Stockholm hard rock shop Heavy Sound who put it out on its shortlived imprint bearing the same name as the shop. Falling somewhere between 70's hard rock and the not yet fully developed heavy metal, ”Full Speed At High Level” not only suffers from being insufficiently self-produced, but worse: inexperienced songwriting and amateurish playing. Ragne Wahlquist's vocals are laughably bad, weak and screechy, much like the guitars actually. The drums (handled by Styrbjörn Wahlquist) try so hard to be powerful, but due to the inferior production, it sounds is if they never quite gel with the rest of the music. Dan Molén's bass is perfectly audible though, flipflopflapping about in the midrange. It takes only one listen to ”Full Speed At High Level” to understand why Heavy Load was once dubbed Sweden's very own Spinal Tap.
The best tracks, if you can find anything here worthy of that description, are also the two most rooted in prog, the rambling, twelve-minute ”Storm” and ”Caroline”, which could have been moody with a producer without a broken hearing aid.
Heavy Load's later albums aren't good either, but at least the band hade obtained some clue of
what they were doing by then. Here they just don't know squat. ”Full
Speed At High Level” flaps and flaps like a psychotic turkey, never
going anywhere but right down to the ground. It's easy to poke fun at
this meltdown as the ambitions are so high and the results are so low, but honestly, it deserves no better than being
laughed at – hard. It's more comedy than anything else, and a definite must-hear for fans of grand
fails.
Full album
SYDKRAFT – Sydkraft (EMI, 1979)
Swedish vocals, English
vocals
International relevance:*
This is an album I've hesitated to put up here for
years. But as it's among those '100 bands you also might want to
check out' in ”The Encyclopedia of Swedish Progressive Music”
book, I thought that I should have a go at it anyway, if only to get
it done with. While it has faint progg hints as in the guitars
of ”London (Hela dygnet laddat)” and ”Lycka till”, it's not
really a progg album at all. It's closer to the commercial pop rock of
bands such as Noice, Snowstorm and Magnum Bonum. Names that mean
little or nothing to foreign listeners but say a whole lot to Swedes.
And what they say is not good.
Sydkraft may have had more pronounced
new wave or pop punk edge than the aforemention bands, but not enough to redeem their truly
annoying songs. The best track is the Buddy Holly cover ”Love's
Made A Fool Of You” which features some pretty hot harmonica from Mats Ronander (Nature et al), but
it's still pretty redundant. The worst moments by far is Sydkraft's
attempt at reggae which is closer to an insult than a tribute. For
some reason, some people holds this album in pretty high regard, but
don't ask me why because I found this one a 24 carat clunker. They
had two singles out as well (both included on the digital reissue),
but thankfully they never relased another album.
Full album playlist
Wednesday, June 15, 2022
GEORGE T ROLIN BAND – The Grunden Recordings 1980 (Flymama, released 2019)
International relevance: **
Archival release from a band with a pretty solid progg provenance. Three members had been in Scoop, a Södertälje band which also featured Kenth Loong from Blueset. Christer Åkerberg of Trettioåriga Kriget not only brought his guitar to the band, he also let them rehearse at Trettioåriga Kriget's rehearsal space named Grunden (where this session was recorded, hence the album title). George Trolin in turn had made a good impact as a singer for Panta Rei.
But to be perfectly honest: the band's progg connotations are far more impressive than their music. Although tightly performed and executed with serious intentions, they end up rehashing 70's Stones licks and some washed-up Mott The Hoople ideas. And as impressive Trolin was in Panta Rei, well, here he sounds more like a Mats Ronander of Nature doing hungover Mick Jagger impersonations. It's Åkerberg who's the star here, stealing the show with some really elegant and soaring guitar work, on ”Hey Girl” in particular.
While ”The Grunden Recordings” may
seem interesting on paper, it's pretty redundant in reality, with their pre-history raising wrong expectations.
George T Rolin Band had one 45 out in 1983, "Sommaren kommer" b/w "Elenor". It's on the CTR label and is neither expensive nor very sought after.
VARIOUS ARTISTS – Jazz & Rock (Caprice, 1979)
Caprice Records have always been
tireless flagbearers for Swedish contemporary and historic
music, but then again, being the record outlet for the Rikskonserter
organisation, they were on a mission from the Swedish Social Democrat
government in the 70's. While that might sound dull, more often than
not it wasn't, as their catalogue of jazz, folk and classical music
is as almost as qualitative as it is quantitive. Don't forget that
their series of annual volumes of ”Jazz in Sweden” gave us both
Sevda and Rena Rama back in the day. While Caprice have graced ”Jazz
in Sweden” with CD and/or digital reissues, of the informal trilogy
of ”Jazz- Och Rockstipendiater 1976”, ”Tvärsnitt” and ”Jazz
& Rock” only the latter resurfaced as a (digital) reissue for the time being. Similar in spirit to ”Jazz in Sweden”, these three
volumes are different insofar they also present rock oriented
bands.
On the live recorded ”Jazz & Rock”, the most out-and-out rock –
or progg – band here is Ramaskri. Their three tracks remind me of a
more rudimentary ”Hej på er!” era Trettioåriga Kriget, which
means I'm not at all impressed by them. Very dull.
Only
marginally better are Stetson Cody Group whose four tracks are more varied. ”Kraftrock” suggests King Crimson or perhaps some lesser RIO act. Then they go from undistinguished prog over pseudo-symphonic rock
to 'complicated' and pretty embarrassing funk fusion. Worth mentioning is that this was Kjell Hilding Lövbom's first band. He later changed his name to Kee Marcello and made it big with hair metal band Europe.
Barabbas
round off the album in a slightly more pleasing manner with two
rather energetic free jazz/post-bop outworks. While not top of the
heap, they're at least OK.
All in all, this is far from any of
Caprice's most memorable releases. Europe completists (if there's such a thing) need it, but hardly anyone else.
Full album playlist
Tuesday, June 14, 2022
GREAT AD – Deep Down Death (Subliminal Sounds, recorded 1975-1976, released 2022)
Malmö trio Great Ad only managed to release two 45's during their existence, both on the Scam label famous (or infamous) for Solid Ground's exceedingly rare ”Made In Rock” LP. With the singles issued in tiny editions of 100 each, in 1975 and 1976 respectively, they too are gargantuan rarities. Both singles are featured on Subliminal Sounds' archival release ”Deep Down Death”, fleshed out with more primitive but for the most part OK sounding recordings (especially in the 'basement' category) made before the band broke up as an even more confident five-piece due to military draft.
The four singles tracks open the
compilation with classic mid-70's hard rock with
progressive moves. But it's the unreleased material that truly
reveals Great Ad's potential and explains why they once were dubbed
'Northern Europe's most violent band'. Tough riffing and unhinged-to-the-point-of-transgressive guitar soloing, plus: surprisingly
convincing vocals! The fidelity even emphasizes the band's inherent rawness
that sets them apart from several other hard rock bands of the era
that may have had weight but not necessarily grit. Great Ad had both,
and at times they could whip up a menacing, intimidating sound that
almost makes me think of Blue Cheer in their heyday. Not in style,
but in power.
There are plenty of albums that should have been
kept forever hostage by oblivion and not being reissued. And there are many
archival tapes that should never have been excavated from whatever
putrid abyss they originated from. That's certainly not the case
with ”Deep Down Death”. The question here is not why this was released. The question here is why this wasn't released before. Hadn't fate had other plans for Great Ad, they could have
been legends. In a way they were. It only took us almost 40 years to
find out.
Full album playlist (Bandcamp)
KATAS DÖTTRAR – Kvinnor sjung ut! Två sidor av Katas Döttrar (A Disc, 1979)
Swedish vocals
International
relevance: *
Another feminist album to add to
the previous lot of ”Jösses flickor”, ”Tjejclown”, ”Sånger om kvinnor” and the rest. Meaning: lyrics with plenty of message;
clumsy lyrical metres negligent of melody; idiotic pastiches; annoying
vocals, and too many people singing at once, religious style.
(Religion and politics often do the same thing to people's heads
anyway, so why not...). Soundwise it's a bit slicker than the
standard political/feminist outpourings, a bit more towards
”Sessornas sånger”. Some songs are OK-ish, such as the title
track and the semi-folk rock of ”Visa i 70-tal”, but as with most
albums in this ilk, there's a cultish vibe running through it that
quickly becomes unbearable unless you're part
of the cult. Short songs, mostly around 1 to 2 minutes in length but if that sounds hopeful to you, remember there are 19 of them...
Side one
Side two
Monday, June 13, 2022
VARIOUS ARTISTS – 10 års kultur i partiets tjänst (Kulturföreningen Spartacus, MC, 1981)
International relevance: *
Is this an endurance test, or what? A double cassette-only release named ”Ten years of
culture at the service of the party”, with the party in question
being KPML(r), the far-lefties best known on this blog for inhouse
propaganda band Knutna Nävar. Needless to say, Knutna Nävar appear
here with three tracks, including the otherwise unavailable
”Mortelslagen ekar i bambubyn” which is a rather suggestive and
hypnotic track. Dan Berglund, Maria Hörnelius and Röda Ropet are
other wellknown names. Also Viveka Seldahl and
Knutna Nävar affiliate Sven Wollter; both later launched successful
acting careers. And then there's the expected slew of marchings
bands, Stalinist choirs, ideologically constipated
singer/songwriters, and various other fistwavers. The few listenable
tracks would have made a half-decent EP, but at almost 90 minutes,
this is a study in nausea.
Full album
INFRA / TREKLÖVER – Infra/Treklöver (Subliminal Sounds, 1972/1974, released 2022)
Two names, but basically the same band. Beginning as Treklöver, they recorded a demo for EMI in 1972 which lead nowhere. After recruiting singer Eddy Kristiansen, they changed their name to Infra, taped a 1974 demo for UK label RSO which faced the same fate as their first, leaving two studio sessions left unheard by the public for four decades.
The Infra demo takes up the major part of the album with seriously progressive rock with symphonic aspirations, which for the sake of clarity means plenty of neurotic time signature changes. They indeed aim high, and although they're accomplished musicians, there are split seconds where especially drummer Jörgen Nordgren slips. OK, so it's a demo, but the clean and conspicuously modern-sounding production is too revealing at crucial moments. Eddy Kristiansen in turn is way too operatic and pretentious, but it gets even worse when he tries to 'rawk out' in the busy bordering-on-hysterical ”Keep On Truckin'” in which he gets absolutely unbearable.
All in all, it's everything I absolutely hate with progressive rock.
Not that the Kristiansen-less
two-song Treklöver tape is much better. The production gels a bit better here, and while hired-gun vocalist and organ player Ann-Marie
”Ami” Henning's voice is a bit weak, it's still way more pleasant
to listen to than Kristiansen's self-important bombast. But already
in the band's early stage, they suffered from time signature
Tourettes and it takes me a fair amount of death defiance to get
through eight minutes of ”Saturn” (one of their two tracks here).
”Infra/Treklöver” will probably
give folks who enjoy playing their Trettioåriga Kriget albums at 45
rpm a boner, but my self-mutilation session with this nonsense is
forever over.
Full album playlist (Bandcamp)
Sunday, June 12, 2022
INGEMAR OLSSON – Livs levande (Teamton, 1970)
Ingemar Olsson is a very prolific and
still active artist, and one of the better mainstream
singer/songwriters to come out of the Swedish Xian movement in the
70s. ”Livs levande” was his debut and sports a slew of studio
pros including Janne Schaffer, jazz flautist Tommy Koverhult and
drummer Ola Brunkert. Claes af Geijerstam provides percussion and
backing vocals, and also produced the album which explains why ”Livs
levande” shares some characteristics with Geijerstam's own 1970
solo debut "Out Of My Hair".
The songs are split between English and Swedish tracks with some fairly witty lyrics. Not all of them are good with the country parody ”Jesus Walked This Lonesome Valley” being the worst, and the Simon & Garfunkel cover ”Mrs. Robinson” feeling very redundant 40+ years later. But there are some nice moments here, such as ”Somebody's Knocking On My Door”, a is mellow and catchy post-60's pop song, and the pleasantly breezy ”En typisk medmänniska” with a swirling Leslie guitar emphasizing the light feel. The entire album's a lighthearted and good-natured effort, retaining much of the hopeful air of the 60's.
Musically and generally speaking, it may not be the
classic some claim it to be, but you have to acknowledge it for being
a pioneering work being one of the first albums, if not the
first, to blend Xian concerns with a real mainstream appeal. Also,
coming only one year behind Pugh Rogefeldt's ”Ja dä ä dä”,
it's one of the earliest proper pop albums to feature Swedish lyrics.
In 2019, Olsson overdubbed new Swedish vocals to the originally English speaking tracks, and while it might have looked like a good idea at first given that Olsson's English pronounciation wouldn't quite get the Queen's approval, the update sounds like any attempt of that kind, with the young Olsson and the mature Olsson anachronistically trading vocals. If you want the album, make sure to get the original vinyl version or the original CD release from 2005 ('wrong' version has brighter sleeve colours so it's easy to distinguish from the old CD).
Full album playlist
J.P NYSTRÖMS – Låtar i Norrbotten (Manifest, 1979)
Formed way up in the Swedish north in small Malmberget
(current population of around 6,000), a part of municipality
Gällivare, J.P. Nyströms took their name from a prominent 19th
century harmonium builder. Harmonium was indeed part of their gear
along with fiddle and the diatonic button accordion. Much like
Norrlåtar, J.P. Nyströms repertoire consisted of tunes from the
Norrbotten region, and they are a bit like a poor man's Norrlåtar,
with a lighter touch and a softer edge. The dance tunes and songs are
mostly upbeat, and if you're not well versed in the deep traditions,
a lot of it come off as pretty lightweight (especially when compared
to Norrlåtar). Perhaps that's why the slower, more melancholy
”Villiruusu (Vildrosen)”, ”Rimppa” and ”Matalan torpan
balladi (Det låga torpets ballad)” stand out, breaking the
otherwise rather samey flow.
This was J.P. Nyström's first album, and they have infrequently released a few more over the years. They're still active to this day.
Full album playlist
Saturday, June 11, 2022
EMIGRANTORKESTERN – Nu packar vi bagaget: Emigrantvisor (Oktober, 1978)
International relevance: *
Above average Oktober album insofar it
has a bit of entertainment value. Firmly rooted in tradition, the
album focuses on songs from the period in Swedish history when almost
one million Swedes left poverty for hope for a better life in America
from the mid 19th to the early 20th century.
With less blatant politics shoved in your face it's easier to stomach
than most releases on the Oktober label, but while the performances
are enthusiastic, its greatest value is still of a documentary
nature. I appreciate that these songs are saved on record for
posterity as they represented an important part of Sweden's social
history, but it's not an album I'd put on for everyday pleasure. As a
matter of fact, I'm not sure I'll ever put it on again. Quite
frankly, it gets a too thumbs-up hey-ho over the course of 40
minutes playing time, not unlike a Guinness-soaked Dubliners
album.
Emigrantorkestern released two more albums in 1982 and
1983, plus a 45 also on Oktober in 1982. Their final LP ”Rårivet”
was recorded with homemade instruments.
Side one
Side two
DRÖMPOJKARNA – Drömpojkarna (Grisbäck, 1979)
Featured here mainly because of the label Grisbäck run by Ulf Bejerstrand, and because it's included in the '100 bands that didn't make the cut' in The Encyclopedia of Swedish Progressive Music. Very little here could possibly be called progg, although there's a couple of references to the Music Movement mentality in one of the lyrics. Mostly "Drömpojkarna" is just straightforward pop, or perhaps 'rural new wave' if such a thing exists. I suspect it was some of the lyrics that appealed the most to Beijerstrand's prepubescent toilet humour.
The album was reputedly recorded in
just 17 hours and it's probably true. If you can ignore the weak vocals and some of the most
embarrassing lyrics (which is hard if you're a Swede), some of the
songs are in fact rather good and wouldn't have been out of place on
some early outing on the seriously amiable Svenska Popfabriken label.
(As a matter of fact, Drömpojkarna went to the village of Klippan in
Skåne after this debut album was released to record their final two
45s in the Svenska Popfabriken's legendary Studio Bombadill.) "Vagabond” is a catchy
enough psuedo-country number, and the band's theme song ”Drömpojkar” is
a nice slow garage rock inspired track, while a basement organ adds an
ethereal, almost psychedelic touch to ”Äppelpaj med vaniljsås”.
But the flat production and the general uniformity of the songs makes the
album too one-dimensional to sit through in a single session. And,
like I said, there's not much here for the progg-head.
After releasing the two aforementioned
singles, Drömpojkarna members went on to join other Svenska
Popfabriken bands (including the obscure Hugh Scott Band) and Aston
Reymers Rivaler.
Full album playlist
Friday, June 10, 2022
HUSMODERNS BRÖST – Där fruarna bor (Amalthea, 1979)
At a first glance, this looks just like your standard feminist pamphlet, but it's a lot better executed than most of the albums in that field. Vocals are way better, and the jazziness sometimes suggests inspiration coming from Joni Mitchell's elastic vocalisms.
Malmö's Husmoderns Bröst were formed as an instrumental combo already in 1974, and by the time their first and only album ”Där fruarna bor” (”where the wives live”) came out in 1979, they sure had gained their chops. The album displays tight and versatile playing, and just like the vocals it has some jazzy edges that thankfully never strays into fullblown fusion. The songs cover a lot of ground, ranging from the Latin moves of ”Samba allergi” and ”Kork o plast” to the semi-reggae of ”Husmoderns affär”, from the disco allusions of ”Husmoderns disk-o-bänk” to the Steely Dan-ish slickness of ”Husmoderns vals” (which despite the slickness stands out as the collection's best track).
While it is nice to hear an album once in a while where the players actually can play good enough to get their point across musically, I have to say that ”Där fruarna bor” is a bit too clinical. It was released in 1979, at the tail end of the progg era, and as confirmed by several albums from around the same time, the heart and soul of the Movement had pretty much gone out of it and become something different and not necessarily better. ”Där fruarna bor” is an OK album, but comes off as a bit pedantic at times, and while it has its moments songwise, I'm left with an unsatisfied feeling once its over. It's a lot more accomplished than (the more entertaining) Röda Bönor and a lot more gratifying than, say, ”Tjejclown”, but it simply goes a bit too far into the realms of perfection to engage.
Husmoderns Bröst also appear on
Silence album ”Bara brudar”, as well as ”Min søsters stemme”
on Danish label Demos, both albums released in 1978 and recorded live
at feminist music festivals. They disbanded in 1980,
with their most prolific songwriter Maria Lundström continuing in music, releasing several solo albums from the 80's and on.
Full album playlist
JONAS HELLBORG – The Bassic Thing (Amigo, 1981)
Jonas Hellborg is a world renowned
bassist having played with a plethora of bands and musicians as
diverse as John McLaughlin, Material, Public Image Ltd. and Ginger
Baker. He's best known as a jazz fusion player, and although this his
debut album shows him a solo player in the strictest sense, it's
still a fusion album, with fusion moods, fusion moduses and fusion
methods. Stripping away every other musician to let the electric bass
be all and everything doesn't change that. And if your standard
fusion album is a group exercise in picking fluff out of your
umbilicus, "The Bassic Thing" even more of a belly button scrutiny. I never
understood the notion of the bass – or for that matter, the drums – as a solo
instrument as anything but a show-off by someone who doesn't know his
or her place in an ensemble setting. And a show-off this is. I'm bored to ashes before even the first track
is finished, and then there's 35 more minutes to suffer by. File under 'patience flagellation'.
Full album
Thursday, June 9, 2022
SAMBANDET – Gud är! (no label, 1976)
This is one of the most striking obscurities from the Swedish Jesus underground. Still largely undiscovered, two tracks were included on Subliminal Sound's excellent ”Frälst!” comp, so I suspect it's only a matter of time until prices skyrockets. (One guy on Discogs already tries to cram a laughable €300 out of it – yeah, right, good luck with that.) Until then, it's still possible for a lucky guy to pick it up for peanuts in local charity shops around Sweden.
Apart from being recognized by Subliminal Sounds, the appearance of Björn Famne immediately piqued my curiousity. Famne 's finest moment is ”Vampire”, an outrageous full frontal fuzz attack originally featured on his eponymous 1975 Rasp Records EP and later revived on ”Who Will Buy These Wonderful Evils Vol. 3”. Those who because of that and Sambandet's two ”Frälst!” tracks expect a hard psych freak-out from their sole LP ”Gud är” (”God is”) from 1976 are sure to be disappointed though. As a whole, this is a different beast – but an intriguing one.
Those in the know consider ”Gud är”
as one of the finest Xian albums ever to come out of Sweden, and it
doesn't take much to get its appeal. It's much harder to pinpoint its
style though, as it constantly changes. ”I Am Free” is a
strangely prog-induced track with quacking wah-wah guitar, while
”Go(o)d News” is a bizarre kind of tripped-out studio exotica,
with no similarity whatsoever to anything else on the album. (No
wonder these two tracks ended up on ”Frälst!”) Unusual to a
religious album, a large part of ”Gud är” is all instrumental.
Some tracks remind me of a less trippy and more flute-folky Älgarnas
Trädgård (but I might be just about the only person in the whole wide world to sense that), while ”Don't
Be A Loser” could have been a Gabor Szabo outtake with its
clean-sounding easy listening styled guitar work and feather-light
beat. ”Happy” makes me think of a Gentle Giant getting drunker by
the minute on Swedish schnapps while trying to play a sunlit jazz
waltz. ”Vi tycker om att sjunga” translates to ”we like to sing” but is in fact another short instrumental which sounds as
if it could have been the theme music from a 70s children show no-one
ever saw. ”I Wanna Be More” in turn is Sambandet's stab at but of
course warped through a prism of female vocals private pressing UK
folk. And so on.
”Gud är” is one of those albums so
kaleidoscopic in style it's hard to understand what exactly the
band was aiming for. Definitely inconsistent, but the inconsistency
is also what gives it its weird charm and works to its advantage.
Recorded in the semi-mysterious/semi-legendary Falks Studio in small
city Eksjö, it has a ”professional low-budget” sound that goes
well along with the decidedly mixed skills of the performers. (Falks Studio might even be the label, but who knows.) Björn
Famne is a driven guitarslinger (and shows off his acoustic guitar
chops on the renaissance sounding instrumental ”Bortom”), while
drummer Kjell Ljunggren doesn't bother a sometimes sloppy beat.
The wild mood and style changes makes
for a truly original listening experience, and once you've put it on,
it's hard to turn it off as you never quite grow accustomed to its
bizarre versatility. Hear it ten times, and you're still not prepared
for what comes around the corner. Like I just said, I've no idea what
Sambandet were trying to achieve anything but whatever lept to their
minds at any given moment, but in the end, the possible lack of a
proper plan almost appears visionary. It's a one-of-a-kind album no
matter how you look at it, and if you decide to strictly view it as a
Xian album designed to woe the Lord, it only gets even stranger and
even more confusing.
Is it a masterpiece? Not necessarily,
but it's sure an album you don't hear everyday but one you definitely
want to hear more than once in your lifetime. If only to find it out.
I Am Free
Go(o)d News
DAGENS UNGDOM – Pick-nick på bilparkering (Mistlur, 1982)
Avid blog readers might remember I have a certain weakness for bands straddling the fence between progg and punk. Something interesting happens when the twain meet, when traceable remnants get energized by a new attitude. Sometimes the results are excellent like Kräldjursanstalten, sometimes they're just... Boojwah Kids. You can't always win.
From Hudiksvall, Dagens Ungdom stormed the stage in 1980 with the four track EP ”Den sanningssökande hunden” (”the truth-seeking dog”) on Mistlur, a label that like Dagens Ungdom walked the thin line between progg and new wave/punk. The EP is more a lot more punk and reggae than their subsequent full length album – the best was yet to come.
Dagens Ungdom stayed with Mistlur, and
in 1982, their first and only album appeared on the label. It's a
more accomplished work than their EP, rich with angular rhythms and
sudden changes, sometimes reminiscent of a less bombastic, more
skeletal Cardiacs. Some tracks are a bit contrived but their
compositional grasp had tightened a lot overall in the two years
that had passed since their somewhat trying debut EP. It's hard to
single out any particular track – ”Pick-nick på bilparkering”
works best as a whole despite a slight inconsistency due to a couple of less than potent pastiches. It's not as exciting as Kräldjursanstalten,
but if you too are interested in the progg/punk borderline style,
it's well worth hearing.
Full album playlist
Full EP
Wednesday, June 8, 2022
SVARTVITT – Svartvitt (Nacksving, 1981)
Latecomers
to the Nacksving roster, Svartvitt had a straightforward gritty style
close to what you could expect from a late 70's/early 80's Gothenburg
band. Their secret weapon was powerhouse singer Gerda Persson whose
raspy and soulful voice gave them a certain edge that nevertheless
set Svartvitt apart from most other bands at the time, giving
guitarist and main songwriter Bernt Wahlsten's songs a touch of a
revved-up working class version of Delaney & Bonnie at their
heaviest. Svartvitt's style may not be something that automatically
appeal to fans of the more experimental side of progg, but to those
who fancy the no-nonsense approach of bands such as Rekyl, Huntington Band and Ensamma Hjärtan, Svartvitt will most likely come as a pleasant surprise. Gerda Persson did in fact appear on Ensamma Hjärtan's
final studio LP ”Nam Nam” in 1981.
Svartvitt also had
several singles out; their debut work was a self released 500 copies
7” in 1979, while the heavy ”Solsting” and the slightly punkish
”Gasmannen” were culled from ”Svartvitt” for a 1980 45. The
album's most accessible track ”En gång till” was strangely
enough only distributed as a promo 12” not available for general
consumption.
The band's history goes back to 1976,
but it wasn't until 1979 they settled for the name Svartvitt. They
were active to at least 1983 when their second and final album ”En
ny tid” arrived through Nacksving. While it still had its share of
good songs, the production was marred by an 80's production seriously weakening its impact. Still,
Svartvitt remain as one of the unsung heroes of latter-day progg in a wide sense.
Värdighet
Gasmannen
Jag vill ha mer
En gång till
Solsting
Kan du höra hjärtat slå
LOVART – Stormsvalor (Oktober, 1977)
There's simply no end to albums declaiming the horrors of capitalism and the glory of the betrodden working class of the world. Yes, I agree that capitalism eats the less fortunate on a golden plate with caviar and paté and then finish off the meal with a loud burp, but please – stop whining about it! Please. Just stop. Please.
These albums are so formualic and
predictable I no longer need to actually listen to them to know just
how they sound. But yeah, I listened to Lovart, with a supernatural patience and a glass of wine to relax my poor tried and tested brain. Apart from the standard political sermons, here's
the as-shouty-as-always male and female singer hollering some Asian/Latin
American/Russian inspired melody (sometimes interspersed by good-timey
pastiches that are even worse). Did those 'passionate', 'politically
aware' and 'socially conscious' desktop communists pay any royalties
to the betrodden people they nicked their tunes from? Or was it all a rip-off in good spirit?
OK, so the Danish traditional ballad ”Herr
Tidman” is pretty okay for a song, and most songs on ”Stormsvalor”
are in fact originals (according the sleeve at least) but that is beside the point. The point is that
this is just another exercise and selfrighteous and thickheaded
political shouting. Then again, what did you expect from a label with both Fria Bloody Proteatern and Bruks-fucking-teatern on their roster...
Note to self: Don't forget to take a double dose of meds before listening to the next album with lyrics utlizing the phrase ”majority of the shares”.
No links found.
Tuesday, June 7, 2022
LARS KIHLBOM – Spegelryttaren (Talking Music, 1981)
Swedish lyrics, instrumental
International
relevance: **
Little-known or at least rarely mentioned album
by not very productive singer/songwriter Lars Kihlbom. My guess is
that Ola Magnell and Marie Bergman were among his prime inspirations.
Kihlbom, however, was never even within grasp of Magnell's
talent. The songs often deal with interpersonal relations but fail to engage. I simply don't care about Kihlbom's pedestrian
observations of mundane situations. The best tracks are the short
instrumentals – the opener ”Introduction” is by far the most
interesting 35 seconds on the entire album along with the Debussy
drenched flute closer ”Israel” clocking in at less than a minute
and a half. The album title is quite poetic though, meaning "The Mirror Horseman".
Talking Music was a seemingly Christian Gothenburg
label which released several singles and albums by a variety of
little-known acts such as Kyrkstöt, Ben Antell Band and Dynamis.
They were also the distributor of Tomas Ernvik's/Vatten's Gutta
label.
Lars Kihlbom released a non-album
7” in 1981, plus a couple of albums later in the 80s. In a strange
turn of events, he also record a 45 in 1988 with tennis pro Mats
Wilander as part of his less than successful musical career. There are also a couple of much later albums up on Youtube by one Lars Kihlbom which I assume is the "Spegelryttaren" guy.
No links found.
ROGER EKMAN – Ångest (no label, 1978)
Swedish vocals
International relevance: **
This is an album I've been eager to
hear for years, but being in the three-figure league pricewise, it's
not one you easily stumble upon (or can afford if you, like me, are
on a tight budget). It's been conspicuously absent from the Internet
as well. As the years went by, my hopes for a true gem only got
higher, but I was afraid it would in fact be another Axelsson dump of
incompetence. Thankfully, it isn't near Axelsson's unfathomable
crappiness at all, and despite its dark lyrical topics, it's not a
fright trip into the mental abyss like Stephen David Heitkotter
either. Instead, it's a surprisingly accessible and well-crafted
piece of work.
”Ångest” means ”anxiety” in English,
and the lyrics deal with the insufficient mental health care system
from an indeed personal standpoint. Knowing the lyrics capture
firsthand experiences of depression and anxiety, they hit harder than
if they were only an outsider's proclamations to make easy political
points. Better still is that Ekman was a talented songwriter and a
good enough singer who also managed to assemble a line-up of able
students from Stockholm's distinguished Adolf Fredrik's music school to get
his ideas across. The arrangements often have a jazzy feel but with
its acoustic framework including flute, sax and upright bass, they
never fall into the dreaded fusion trap. Some songs have a Latin
touch as opening track ”Väntan”, while ”Besök hos en
allmänpraktiserande läkare (specialitet nervösa besvär)” is
decidedly folksy. Tobias Peterson compares Ekman to Ronny Åström in
his progg encyclopedia, but to be honest, I don't hear Åström as
much as I hear someone like Mikael Ramel thanks to the album's
versatile musicality and Ekman's melodic sense. The album was
recorded live-in-the-studio and has a highly appealing organic
well-balanced sound rather unusal to private pressings – the
richness of the upright bass is particularly sweet.
”Ångest”
had a run of only 100 copies in 1978 and has never been repressed.
Most of them were given away to friends, but a batch of overstock
copies was later discovered and sold with a newly produced booklet
authorized by Ekman himself, as the original insert was missing in
some of the covers. To keep the original manufacturing costs to a
minimum, the album came in sleeves from other records turned inside
out, and were re-glued and stamped with Roger Ekman's name along with
the album title.
As the album's raison
d'être is the lyrics, an important aspect is lost to
non-Swedes so it might not appear as urgent to foreigners, but with
Ekman's knack for songwriting and the empathic backing musicians,
it's still an album several notches above the standard homemade progg
album. Despite ”Ångest's” lyrical concerns, it's a beautiful
album to listen to and one in a crying need for a proper reissue.
Until then you might want to check out this website
in case any copies of the re-circulated original are still available.
Full album
Monday, June 6, 2022
MARIE SELANDER, STYRBJÖRN BERGELT & SUSANNE BROMS – Å än är det glädje å än är det gråt (Ett Minne För Livet, 1976)
Marie
Selander has one of the finest voices heard in the entire progg canon,
every bit as authentic as Shirley Collins but with the sombre power of Sandy Denny. Every time she opens her mouth to sing, it makes you listen a bit
closer.
”Å än är det glädje å än är det gråt” is
her second proper solo album, following ”Från den svenska vildmarken” from 1973. It is however co-credited to flautist
Susanne Broms and multi-instrumentalist Styrbjörn Bergelt who create
a rough-hewn backdrop of ancient sounding folk music. Listening to
the sparsely framed, rugged traditional songs is like listening to a
tree growing its bark, full of life but without any unnecessary,
distracting material. If you're looking for flashy fanciness, go elsewhere
because you won't find it here. This frugality is very alluring, and
best of all, it leaves a generous space to Selander's voice which is
as enticing as ever, and creates a deep sense of dark fir forest
mystery. Perhaps an acquired taste to some, but utterly rewarding to anyone who accept the challenge and persist.
VARIOUS ARTISTS – Norrbottenplattan vol. 2: Kom igen! (Manifest, 1978)
Swedish
vocals
International relevance: **
It's not often that a seven-inch finds its way to the blog, but this is is one of them. (It's not that I don't care about singles, it just hasn't happened very often yet.) Then again, it's almost like half an album, with five tracks running at 33 1/3 rpm. It's the second volume of two, with volume 1 being released by Manifest the previous year, 1977. It features a couple of lesser-known outfits, as well as members from familiar bands from Sweden's Northern regions, such as Rekyl, Skottes Musikorkester and Anton Swedbergs Svängjäng.
The weakest track shares the A-side
with the best one. Lule Stassteater, a local independent theatre
group, contributes a 'funny' stinker called ”Flyttvisa från
Norrbotten” quickly followed by the excellent "Snålblåst" by members of Rekyl's, Skottes Musikorkester
and Det Rivna Pianot collectively named Snålblåstgänget. If ”Snålblåst”
sounds familiar, it's probably because you've heard songwriter Tomas Forsell's own version of it on his second album ”Nya tider” from
1980. Forsell's recording is the better of the two, but the song is
simply excellent you just can't fail with it. To my ears, it's one of
the Great Songs of the progg era.
The B side offers up three
tracks, none of them particularly good. Folket I Ton's ”Vi vägrar
att flytta” is run-of-the-mill shout-your-propaganda-message crap;
Pyramid's contribution ”Arbete och liv” sounds like a late 70s
Christian MOR track with the religious theme replaced by unexeciting
political lyrics, and Anton Swedberg Svängjäng's ”Kom igen!” is
probably their weakest ever outing and another
”shout-your-propaganda” track even worse than Folket I Ton.
If you like ”Snålblåst” as much
as I do, you might want to seek this one out, otherwise you can
safely pass on this.
Lule Stassteater - Flyttvisa från Norrbotten
Folket I Ton - Vi vägrar att flytta
Pyramid - Arbete och liv
Anton Swedbergs Svängjäng - Kom igen!
OMAR – Omar (12", Lucas, 1978)
International relevance: **
A 21 minute four track twelve-inch, mentioned in ”The Encyclopedia of Swedish Progressive Music” in the postcript of 100 bands that didn't make it to the main book. All tracks are originals (three in English, one in Swedish) but none of them make much of an impression being mainly AOR-ish rock with faint symphonic/hard rock inflections. Very forgettable, and seemingly not much in demand either.
Sunday, June 5, 2022
HÖJ RÖSTEN – Höj Rösten (Oktober, 1974)
With Gunnar Idering, Marie-Louice Söderström and Crister Jonasson from Fria Proteatern at the core of Höj Rösten, this album made me want to smash my furniture in anger and disgust before I had even heard it. (Patient followers of this blog know well what I think of Fria Proteatern.) But as I'm actually a very peaceful man, I restrained myself and chairs and tables are still intact around here.
What's more surprising is that Höj Rösten's lone album is actually very listenable. While the kitchen sink politics are still tiresome (it is, after all, an Oktober release), the songs themselves are much better here than on any Proteatern album. Tobias Petterson wisely points out in his ”Encyclopedia of Swedish Progressive Music” that, ”here the focus on the music content is much greater, retaining the pop sensibility from Idering's 60's band The Mascots so clearly lost on Fria Proteatern”. Very true. ”Femtio år vid maskinerna” is downright beautiful, and ”När man kör en Scania-Vabis” has a lilting groove that reminds me of a slowed-down ”Sympathy For The Devil”, and the reoccuring guitar solo retains that feel. Some biting guitar can also be heard on ”Historien är gravid”.
It's indeed a rare thing with a
political album sporting any proper interest in real songwriting –
it's almost always message before music – but this is a very fine
exception. ”Höj Rösten” is genuinely enjoyable, and it firmly
puts the lid on the garbage can where I threw my Fria Proteatern
albums and buries it right where it belongs, in the ground where all toxic waste is buried.
Full album playlist
KLARATEATERN – Sessornas sånger (YTF, 1976)
With
music written by Gunnar Evander (and lyrics by Per Lysander and
Suzanne Osten), this stands as something of the third part in the informal
feminist trilogy beginning with ”Sånger om kvinnor” in 1971 and
continuing with ”Jösses flickor – befrielsen är nära” in
1975. While not great, ”Sessornas sånger” stands head and
shoulders above the previous two. It's more refined, the perfomances
are smoother thanks to seasoned studio pros such as Rolf Alex and Jan
Bandel but it's also a bit lacklustre, and the songs are at least
occasionally better. Although they originate from a stage
performance by Klarateatern, several of them are focused enough to stand on their
own, in particular the almost-funky ”Den svarta prinsessan och den
röda”, the evocative ”Sessornas magar” and the brooding
gospel-tinged ”O Gud gör mig fattig”. ”Äntligen en prins”
isn't that great, but fans of wah-wah might appreciate it
nevertheless. Some songs have male vocals, but the songs featuring
female vocals fare generally better.
Being musical excerpts from a stage
play, the songs tell a story, with the plot centered around the
Swedish princesses. Given ”Sessornas sånger” was released at the
height of progg era, it's critical of the Swedish monarchy.
All in all, the album's value is
greater as a period piece than a musical work.
Comes with a lyric sheet.
No links found
Saturday, June 4, 2022
THOMAS FRYKBERG – Väderkvarnsväder (A Disc, 1980)
International relevance: **
Most A-Disc albums are best described
as 'just another A-Disc album'. A bitter few of them has anything to
distinguish them; at best it's mediocre
artists with mediocre talents to match the label's desire for mediocrity.
”Väderkvarnsväder” is no exception.
Thomas Frykberg was a
decent songwriter, somewhere at the end of Mikael Ramel's spectrum
with a dash of Blå Tåget's cabaret-like moments, but his qualities
are dampened by a boring studio mafia sound. As a lyricist, Frykberg
isn't even on the same planet as Ramel; the lyrics are a yawn,
riddled with bland politics and the occassional toothless satirical
edge. Frykberg vocal delivery is less than inspiring too. He's a dull singer with a rather weak and non-descriptive
voice, and the semi-jazz fusion backing provided by fusion royalty like Jan
Tolf (Häxmjölk, Resa) and Ulf Adåker (Egba) is obviously competent, or if you prefer a more
honest phrasing: typically bloodless. Best song in the lot is the slightly
melancholy title track with an appealing melody, laced with a
fairly elegant string arrangement and a few amiable flugelhorn
lines. Best song, yes, but not good enough to save the rest of the
album from being destined for oblivion.
No links found
MA CONNECTION – 8691 (Brute Force, 1981)
The songs aren't bad at all, especially in their field. I find myself tapping my feet and nodding my head to ”Mighty Men Of Power” and the gritty ”You Will Care” which, to top it off rather nicely, sports some Eastern-sounding guitar work. All tracks are originals, and given the high quality of the material, that is in fact pretty impressive. Only album closer ”Aching Heart Disease” is a bit 'meh”, being a rather pedestrian blues (and at almost 7 minutes, overlong).
Only 300 copies were pressed, and on the rare occassions ”8691” comes up for sale, it has a rather hefty pricetag attached to it. I can see why: genre fans must drag their drooling tongues on the ground over this! This one is certainly ripe for a proper reissue. Shadoks, are you listening?
Ma Connection also had a live cassette
out, ”Live At Elvira”, of which I know nothing.
For those who may wonder, the cryptic album title refers to Martini Bianco.
Full album playlist
Friday, June 3, 2022
LENA EKMAN – Det beror på ögonen som ser (Mistlur, 1980)
Swedish vocals
International relevance: ***
I didn't expect this to be anything but a disappointment after Lena Ekman's first proper album: ”Hjulspår” is simply one of the best yet-to-be-properly-discovered progg albums, at times a haunting LP that beats Turid in her own game by a mile and gives Stenblomma a run for her money too. With three years apart and a new label (Mistlur instead of Silence), ”Det beror på ögonen som ser” was deemed to have lost something, or at least be different enough to be a let down. Not that change is a bad thing, but ”Hjulspår” is in a special league with qualities that are hard to repeat, and even harder to follow up on a second album.
And no, it's not another ”Hjulspår”, but do not repeat my mistake: ”Det beror på ögonen som ser” is a very fine achievement. Ekman's slightly husky, mature voice is as inviting as ever, and the songs are mostly very good. As a matter of fact, it's hard to pick a weak one and much easier to choose a favourite, which is the excellent ”Vänner ändå”. Almost all of them are Ekman originals, but she manages to sneak in a cover of Danish singer/songwriter Trille as first track. Name players such Hasse Bruniusson, Marie Selander, Turid, Thomas Almqvist and, at the top of the heap, Kjell Westling offer a very pleasing lowkey backdrop that puts Ekman's appealing vocals in the sweet centre spot. The album has a pronounced acoustic feel; a delicate setting for Ekman's delicate songs.
”Det beror på ögonen som ser” is
definitely worth picking up by those into the singer/songwriter side
of progg, and it's good enough also for those who just happened to
have a love for well-crafted and subdued songs well-equipped for
playing at dusk.
No links found